General Scrypting Theory
General Scrypting Theory
General Scrypting Theory |
General Scrypting Theory ( On Pinterest ) |
General Scrypting Theory ( On Pinterest )
Heirarchy Of Concepts:
- You Are An Executive
- The Executive Principle
- General Acting Theory : Generalization Of Theories / Generalizing Principles
- General Scrypting Theory : Generalization Of Theories / Generalizing Principles
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This Is From An Email to a College Student Studying Accounting and Finance. I have previously suggested they look at Finance as "Writing Scrypt" / and more specifically as "Engineering Money"!"
Thomas Cromwell was a "Special Advisor" To King Henry The VIII.
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This Is From An Email to a College Student Studying Accounting and Finance. I have previously suggested they look at Finance as "Writing Scrypt" / and more specifically as "Engineering Money"!"
Thomas Cromwell was a "Special Advisor" To King Henry The VIII.
An "Adjutant" Like "Horatio Gates" was to General George Washington.
The Distinguishing Quality Both Shared was The Knack of "Issuing Worthy Script" ( I Spell It Scrypt for Memetic Reasons ).
SEE: "General Scrypting Theory" by WhoIsAbishag (David Earl Jones's "Brand")
OverTime This Blog Article and Its Associates are Updated ...
PS.: Scrypts are: "Financial Instruments", "Business Orders", "Military Orders", "Computer Orders" also called "Computer Programs", and several other things, hence "General Scrypting Theory"!"
Horatio Gates:
"Origins of the U.S. Army Adjutant General’s Corps 1775-1813
The origins of the U.S. Army Adjutant General’s Corps date back to the American Revolution and the formation of the Continental Army that General George Washington would command for the duration of the war against Great Britain, 1775-1781. On 16 June 1775 the Continental Congress established the position of Adjutant General on Washington’s staff. The following day Congress elected Horatio Gates, a former officer in the British Army, to become the first Adjutant General with the commission of brigadier general. Following Washington, Gates was the second officer to receive a commission in the Continental Army. Subsequently, Gates accompanied Washington to Cambridge, Massachusettes, where on 3 July 1775 Washington assumed command of the Army then laying seige to British forces occupying the city of Boston.
Gates’ position was modeled after the British staff adjutant general assigned for each major expeditionary force. Adjutants derived their mission from the old Latin word “adjutare,” meaning to assist. In the military sense, it came to mean assistance to the commander in all aspects of military operations. In addition to the administrative duties which would later become his primary focus, the Adjutant was responsible for guards, details, paperwork (including transmission of orders), and the formation of infantry into the line of battle. Gates became the senior brigadier general of the Continental Army and as General Washington’s principle assistant brought order and regularity to the fledgling force by transforming the militia units of separate colonies into one “American Army.”1 He organized the assembled colonial troops into companies, regiments, brigades; published the Articles of War; prepared instructions for the recruiting service; organized the intelligence service that kept Washington informed of conditions within the British lines; and generally introduced the rule of discipline to the Army. Deputy Adjutants appointed to each of the major departments and for each of the Continental Army corps and divisions modeled their offices after the service performed by General Gates in the early months of the war that would end British colonial rule in America."
From PDF attached below from: https://ssilrc.army.mil/wp- content/uploads/2017/03/2013- Short-History-AG-Corps.pdf
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